From: Michael Ng <Michael.Ng**At_Symbol_Here**LIU.EDU>
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] chemical receiving
Date: June 29, 2012 10:16:19 AM EDT
Reply-To: DCHAS-L <DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU>
Message-ID: <00f901cd55f3$11d3cec0$357b6c40$**At_Symbol_Here**ualr.edu>

Good morning Bob,

Four words are running through my head after reading your email. Stolen Chemicals. Chemical Spills.

Stolen Chemicals: What provisions are made to prevent potential security threats where chemicals are stolen from universities and hospitals? What is stopping the bad guys from going up to the department office and nabbing a chemical for "other" purposes when no one is looking? Stolen chemicals during shipment fall under the Department of Transportation Hazardous Materials regulations: 49 CFR 172.1 to 172.822. Unattended chemicals and shipments may get stolen, particularly in universities and hospitals, where security is limited. Please See the attached article: http://www.nature.com/news/lab-chemicals-removed-from-texas-campus-1.10238. Here in New York City, The Office of Emergency Management and NYC Police Department Counterterrorism Unit conducts inspections of universities and hospitals, with particular interest in chemical security (who has access to chemicals, chemical inventories, criminal background checks, chemical shipping and receiving procedures, security plan, D!
OT Security Awareness Training - 49 CFR 172.704(a)(4))

Chemical Spills: Chemical spills can occur due to ruptured shipping containers / packaging. What does one do when the contents of a shipment is compromised? Are there individuals trained to deal with chemical spills in the central receiving area? Are there spill kits readily available to handle such an emergency. Who is liable to clean up the spill? Establishments that use or store hazardous materials are required to create an Emergency Response Plan (please refer to Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act of 1986 - 42 U.S.C. Chapter 116 and DOT reuglations 49 CFR 172.600), and such a plan should address spills that occur during chemical receipt.

Michael Ng
Environmental Health and Safety Manager
Long Island University Brooklyn Campus
Buildings and Grounds
1 University Plaza M101
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Tel: (718)-488-1608
Fax: (718)-488-3337
michael.ng**At_Symbol_Here**liu.edu


From: "Robert E. Belford" >
Reply-To: DCHAS-L >
Date: Fri, 29 Jun 2012 07:31:10 -0500
To: >
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] chemical receiving

Hi All,

I am a colleague of Leslie's and would like to ask for input on a different perspective of this, which is essentially the legal perspective.

We have grown tremendously in the past few years, when I came here a decade ago, we did not even have a chemical hygiene plan, this year we just opened a brand new Center for Integrative Nanotechnology Sciences building. Our campus is currently designated as a Carnegie "Research Intensive" institution, but many of our practices trace back to when we were a primary teaching institution. Leslie and members of our EH&S committee are putting together a draft one page "white paper" on the creation of a central receiving and distribution center for the campus which would ultimately go to the Chancellor.

Right now chemicals for chemistry are delivered to the front office of the chemistry department, which is staffed by a secretary and undergraduate student workers (neither of whom have any formal training in the handling of chemicals - and the work-study students are often not even chemistry students). This office is open to the public, chemicals are piled in front of the mailboxes in an open access area, and yes, I sometimes have to reach over stacks of boxes to reach my mail,Éand the secretary often babysits her grandchildren in the same room (I saw them there this week).

So we are looking for material which would justify the creation of a central receiving and distribution center, and I believe cognizance of the legal issues would be of value. I am familiar with Dawn Lee's 2004 "Cradle to Grave" paper in the online Chemical Health and Safety course DCHAS and DivCHED sponsored, http://science.widener.edu/svb/olcc_safety/papers/lee.pdf , which provides some regulatory information. Does anyone know of something more current which would provide an up-to-date synopsis of legal and regulatory issues? We are looking for information which could help us justify the expenditures such an endeavor would cost the University, and it is our hope we will do this proactively, and not retroactively in response to an incident.

Also, does anyone also know of any incidents which have occurred that caused a University to change its policy with respect to the receiving and distribution of chemicals?

Thanks,
Bob Belford

From: DCHAS-L Discussion List [mailto:dchas-l**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU] On Behalf Of Emily Reiter
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 5:22 PM
To: DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**MED.CORNELL.EDU
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L] chemical receiving

How is ordering of chemicals managed? Is it done by individual PIs/department, or is it centralized?
At the University of Alaska Fairbanks, ordering is done by departments or individuals. (Ideally, by a purchasing agent in a department, sometimes by an individual PI with a procard. For the Chem department, all ordering of hazardous materials must be done by the primary admin and/or stockclerk and approved by the safety officer.)

Is central receiving part of a chemistry department, part of an EHS department (or other)?
Not centralized. In the Chem department, it comes to the main office, and is moved to a holding area on the second floor (for teaching lab materials) or on a cart inside a research lab (for research lab materials). Very large or expensive items go to a central receiving building.

Where is the central receiving area located? Inside buildings where there are labs, a separate building near laboratory buildings, or at a distant location (across campus)?
Most boxes come to the main chemistry office. Large quantities go to the loading dock at the back of the building. Very large/expensive items first go the central receiving (which is located several miles away from the Chemistry building).

Are chemicals used in art/engineering/theater departments included in requirements for chemicals to all be received at the one location?
Nope.

How many personnel and what is the scope of their duties? (ordering/receiving/delivering only; part of laboratory inspection and safety training programs)
Not sure I can answer that.


The committee will likely have more questions, but this is a start.

Thanks for your input!

Leslie

--
Leslie B. Coop, CCHO | Lab Manager, Safety Coordinator | Chemistry Department
University of Arkansas at Little Rock | 2801 S. University Ave. | Little Rock, AR 72204
501-569-3192 (o) | 501-590-6026 (c) | lbcoop**At_Symbol_Here**ualr.edu


--

Emily Reiter
Laboratory Coordinator/Safety Coordinator
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
(907) 474-6748; 194A Reichardt Bldg

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